Published in:
01-09-2020 | Atrial Fibrillation
Left atrial wall thickness is associated with the low-voltage area in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation
Authors:
Yosuke Nakatani, Tamotsu Sakamoto, Yoshiaki Yamaguchi, Yasushi Tsujino, Naoya Kataoka, Koichiro Kinugawa
Published in:
Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology
|
Issue 3/2020
Login to get access
Abstract
Purpose
To identify a potential morphological marker of remodeling and electrophysiological dysfunction, we investigated if low wall thickness is associated with low-voltage areas (LVAs) in the left atrium.
Methods
Wall thickness was measured by computed tomography and LVA (% area with bipolar voltage < 0.5 mV) by voltage mapping in 43 paroxysmal AF patients. The left atrium was divided into five segments: septal wall, anterior wall, roof wall, posterior wall, and bottom wall in regional analysis.
Results
Left atrial wall thickness and LVA were 3.2 ± 0.6 mm and 14% ± 9%, respectively. Multivariate analysis identified left atrial wall thickness and volume as independent determinants of left atrial LVA (thickness, standardized β − 0.374, 95%CI − 23.289 to − 4.534, P = 0.005; volume, standardized β 0.452, 95%CI 0.049–0.214, P = 0.002). In regional analysis, significant LVA (> 10% of segment surface area) was observed in 123 of 215 segments (57%). Segments in the low tertile of wall thickness (< 1.76 mm) had larger LVAs compared with segments in middle (1.76–2.14 mm) and high tertiles (≥ 2.14 mm) (low tertile, 20.3% ± 14.9%; middle tertile, 12.6% ± 11.2%; high tertile, 12.5% ± 12.1%; low vs. middle tertile, P = 0.001; low vs. high tertile, P = 0.001). Area under the receiver operating curve of wall thickness was 0.706 for prediction of significant LVA. A thickness cut-off of 1.90 mm yielded 62% sensitivity, 73% specificity, 75% positive predictive value, and 59% negative predictive value for significant LVA.
Conclusion
A thin left atrial wall is an independent predictor of LVA in patients with paroxysmal AF.